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Query: UNIPROT:P04626 (
erbB-2
)
5,251
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
The
epidermal growth factor (EGF) receptor
(EGFR) family consists of four transmembrane tyrosine kinases that undergo homodimerization and heterodimerization. Pancreatic cancers overexpress these receptors. To examine the effects of EGFR blockade on pancreatic cancer cell mitogenesis in relation to activation of specific signaling pathways, four pancreatic cancer cell lines were infected with an adenoviral vector encoding a truncated EGFR (AdtrEGFR), and activation of signaling was assessed with the mitogen-activated protein kinase (MAPK) kinase inhibitors PD98059 and U0126, the p38 MAPK inhibitor SB203580, and the c-Jun
NH2
-terminal kinase inhibitor SP600125. In all four cell lines, AdtrEGFR markedly attenuated EGF and heparin-binding EGF-dependent cell growth, EGFR family tyrosine phosphorylation, and phosphorylation of MAPK, c-Jun
NH2
-terminal kinase, p38 MAPK, and activating transcription factor 2. AdtrEGFR did not alter fibroblast growth factor 2 actions on mitogenesis. In ASPC-1, PANC-1, and T3M4 cells, PD98059 and U0126 inhibited MAPK kinase activation but not EGF-stimulated mitogenesis, whereas SB203580 inhibited EGF-stimulated mitogenesis, p38 MAPK activation, and MAPK-activated protein kinase 2 activation, without attenuating the mitogenic effect of insulin-like growth factor 1. In contrast, in COLO-357 cells, PD98059, and U0126, but not SB203580, inhibited EGF-stimulated mitogenesis, whereas SP600125 did not alter the mitogenic actions of EGF in any of the cell lines. Thus, EGF promotes proliferation via the MAPK in COLO-357 cells but via p38 MAPK in ASPC-1, PANC-1, and T3M4 cells, and whereas EGFR activation leads to the activation of all four members of the EGFR family in these cells, downstream signaling is efficiently blocked by AdtrEGFR.
...
PMID:Multiple mitogenic pathways in pancreatic cancer cells are blocked by a truncated epidermal growth factor receptor. 1235 75
The anti-apoptotic molecule, Bcl-2, is well known to play an important role in the chemoresistance of breast cancer. We have previously demonstrated that phosphorylation of Fas-associated death domain-containing protein (FADD) at 194 serine through c-jun
NH2
-terminal kinase (JNK) activation sensitizes breast cancer cells to chemotherapy through accelerating cell cycle arrest at G2/M, and that Bcl-2 phosphorylation downstream of JNK/FADD plays an important role in cell growth suppression by paclitaxel. In this study, the clinicopathological association of phosphorylated Bcl-2 (P-Bcl-2) with estrogen, progesterone, c-
erbB-2
receptors, p53 expressions and phosphorylated FADD/JNK (P-FADD/JNK) was analyzed immunohistochemically using 107 human breast cancer specimens. Expression of P-Bcl-2 was found to significantly correlate with lymphatic invasion, lymph node metastasis, but not histological differentiation, tumor grade or vascular and fatty invasion. The positivity of P-Bcl-2 was also significantly correlated to that of P-FADD/JNK. Thus, P-Bcl-2 as well as the P-FADD/JNK parameter might be useful markers for cancer progression, independent of the hormone receptor status, in human breast cancers.
...
PMID:Bcl-2 phosphorylation has pathological significance in human breast cancer. 1711 50
We evaluated the ability of different trypsin-revealed tethered ligand (TL) sequences of rat proteinase-activated receptor 2 (rPAR(2)) and the corresponding soluble TL-derived agonist peptides to trigger agonist-biased signaling. To do so, we mutated the proteolytically revealed TL sequence of rPAR(2) and examined the impact on stimulating intracellular calcium transients and mitogen-activated protein (MAP) kinase. The TL receptor mutants, rPAR(2)-Leu(37)Ser(38), rPAR(2)-Ala(37-38), and rPAR(2)-Ala(39-42) were compared with the trypsin-revealed wild-type rPAR(2) TL sequence, S(37)LIGRL(42)-. Upon trypsin activation, all constructs stimulated MAP kinase signaling, but only the wt-rPAR(2) and rPAR(2)-Ala(39-42) triggered calcium signaling. Furthermore, the TL-derived synthetic peptide SLAAAA-
NH2
failed to cause PAR(2)-mediated calcium signaling but did activate MAP kinase, whereas SLIGRL-
NH2
triggered both calcium and MAP kinase signaling by all receptors. The peptides AAIGRL-
NH2
and LSIGRL-
NH2
triggered neither calcium nor MAP kinase signals. Neither rPAR(2)-Ala(37-38) nor rPAR(2)-Leu(37)Ser(38) constructs recruited beta-arrestins-1 or -2 in response to trypsin stimulation, whereas both beta-arrestins were recruited to these mutants by SLIGRL-
NH2
. The lack of trypsin-triggered beta-arrestin interactions correlated with impaired trypsin-activated TL-mutant receptor internalization. Trypsin-stimulated MAP kinase activation by the TL-mutated receptors was not blocked by inhibitors of Galpha(i) (pertussis toxin), Galpha(q) [N-cyclohexyl-1-(2,4-dichlorophenyl)-1,4-dihydro-6-methylindeno[1,2-c]pyrazole-3-carboxamide (GP2A)], Src kinase [4-amino-5-(4-methylphenyl)-7-(t-butyl)pyrazolo[3,4-d]-pyrimidine (PP1)], or the
epidermal growth factor (EGF) receptor
[4-(3'-chloroanilino)-6,7-dimethoxy-quinazoline (AG1478)], but was inhibited by the Rho-kinase inhibitor (R)-(+)-trans-N-(4-pyridyl)-4-(1-aminoethyl)-cyclohexanecarboxamide, 2HCl (Y27362). The data indicate that the proteolytically revealed TL sequence(s) and the mode of its presentation to the receptor (tethered versus soluble) can confer biased signaling by PAR(2), its arrestin recruitment, and its internalization. Thus, PAR(2) can signal to multiple pathways that are differentially triggered by distinct proteinase-revealed TLs or by synthetic signal-selective activating peptides.
...
PMID:Agonist-biased signaling via proteinase activated receptor-2: differential activation of calcium and mitogen-activated protein kinase pathways. 1960 24
Basal-like carcinomas and human epidermal growth factor receptor 2 (
HER-2/neu
) overexpression carcinomas are the subgroups of breast cancers that have the most aggressive clinical behavior. Phosphorylation/activation of c-Jun
NH2
-terminal kinase is characterized as a stress-activated protein kinase, which regulates apoptosis after cellular stress. The aim of this study was to evaluate the association of phosphorylated c-Jun
NH2
-terminal kinase expression with phenotypes and clinicopathologic parameters of breast cancer. Phosphorylated c-Jun
NH2
-terminal kinase was immunohistochemically measured in a cohort of 160 patients with invasive breast cancer treated with therapeutic surgery followed by anthracycline or docetaxel-based chemotherapy. These results were further correlated with the phenotypes and clinicopathologic characteristics of breast cancers. Increased phosphorylated c-Jun
NH2
-terminal kinase expression was significantly associated with lack of estrogen receptor expression (P < .0001), positivity for cytokeratins 5/6 (P = .029), epidermal growth factor receptor (P = .035), basal-like phenotype (P = .015), and "triple-negative" phenotype (P = .01). Furthermore, the positive expression of phosphorylated c-Jun
NH2
-terminal kinase was positively correlated with p-glycoprotein (r = 0.54, P < .0001) and multidrug resistance-associated protein 1(r = 0.38, P < .0001) but not with lung resistance protein (r = -0.02, P = .78). Our results indicate that the activation of phosphorylated c-Jun
NH2
-terminal kinase may play a role in the carcinogenesis of basal-like and triple-negative breast carcinoma.
...
PMID:Elevated expression of phosphorylated c-Jun NH2-terminal kinase in basal-like and "triple-negative" breast cancers. 1991 78
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